Oliver A. Unger
Quick Facts
Biography
Oliver A. Unger (August 28, 1914 – March 27, 1981) was an award-winning American film producer, distributor, and exhibitor who participated in every phase of the motion picture business including production, distribution, marketing, promotion, and exhibition during a 45-year career. He was also a television producer and owner of movie theaters and television stations throughout the United States.
Personal
Unger was born in Chicago, of Hungarian descent. His family also lived in New York before moving back in 1920 to the Hungarian capital, Budapest, where his father, Bertram Unger, was a bank president. They returned to New York City in 1926 and Unger attended Columbia Grammar School until his graduation in 1931. Unger earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Syracuse University in 1935.
Unger was organizing Celebration 33 - a benefit commemorating the thirty-third anniversary of the State of Israel - when he died at the age of 66. He was survived by his wife, Virginia; two sons, Anthony B. Unger and Stephen A. Unger; three daughters: Meryl L. Unger, Dr. Olivia A. Raynor and Victoria R.S. Unger; and a grandson, David A. Unger.
In 1984 the Unger family donated Oliver Unger's collection of personal documents and film production files to the University of Wyoming's American Heritage Center.
Career
Film
From 1937 to 1945 Unger worked for J.H. Hoffberg Co. Inc., after 1940 renamed Hoffberg Productions Inc., eventually serving as Vice President. During this period he was involved with importing and distributing foreign films. He was one of the first businessmen to travel to Europe after World War II, where he purchased foreign films for distribution in the United States. It was during this time that he founded Distinguished Films and Tola Productions with Martin Levine. They produced The Roosevelt Story, an 80-minute documentary about President Franklin D. Roosevelt, filmed under the supervision of Elliott Roosevelt. The Roosevelt Story was awarded the Peace Prize at the 1948 Brussels Film Festival and regarded as "the most popular compilation film of the later 1940s."
In The 1950s, he briefly partnered with Budd Rogers in the distribution firm of Rogers & Unger Inc..In 1961, Unger and Ely Landau formed the Landau-Unger Company, which produced films such as The Pawnbroker and Long Day's Journey into Night. Unger presented the latter at the 1962 Cannes Film Festival, where its stars (Katharine Hepburn, Ralph Richardson, Jason Robards and Dean Stockwell) won the Best Actress and Actor awards collectively. The Landau-Unger Company also distributed the Eleanor Roosevelt Story, which won the 1965 Academy Award for Best Documentary.
Unger produced several films in Southern Africa with Harry Alan Towers in the 1960s.
The Landau-Unger Company was sold to Commonwealth United Corporation in 1967, at which time Unger was named Vice Chairman of Commonwealth United Company. In 1969 he added the titles of Vice Chairman of Commonwealth United Corporation and Chief Executive Officer of Commonwealth's Entertainment Division. Films financed, produced and distributed by Commonwealth United under Unger's tutelage include The Madwoman of Chaillot, The Magic Christian, Julius Caesar and The Battle of Neretva.
In the early 1970s Unger was responsible for acquiring the U.S. marketing rights for a number of Charles Chaplin's films, including Modern Times and City Lights. Soon thereafter, Unger formed Marwi Capital Development N.V. in Paris, whose principal activity was to produce Assassination at Sarajevo also released as The Day That Shook the World (starring Christopher Plummer, Maximilian Schell, and Florinda Bolkan) and Force 10 from Navarone (starring Harrison Ford, Robert Shaw, Carl Weathers and Barbara Bach).
Additionally, over a 20-year period Unger owned and operated (with various partners) a number of movie theaters in Manhattan and The Bronx, among them The Tudor Theatre, The Lido, The Studio, The Little Carnegie, The Cinema Rendezvous and The Fine Arts.
Television
In the early 1950s Unger worked as Vice President of Snader Telescription Sales and headed Station Distributors, "one of the country's first television syndication outfits."
Unger co-founded National Telefilm Associates with Ely Landau and Harold Goldman in 1954, where he served in various capacities and rose eventually to Chairman and President before leaving in 1961. Among the NTA's holdings were various television stations in the United States, including Channel 13 in Newark, N.J. WNTA-TV (now WNET), whose pioneering programming included award-winning shows such as Play of the Week, Open End (hosted by David Susskind), and The Mike Wallace Interviews.
In November 1962, Unger partnered with Bill Sargent and Joe Louis to promote Cassius Clay's (later Muhammad Ali) first closed-circuit fight against Archie Moore in Los Angeles. A couple of years later Unger formed the Freedom Networks after he was approached by Roy Wilkins and Thurgood Marshall (then President and Executive Director of the NAACP, respectively) to produce and promote The Freedom Spectacular, a charity event commemorating the tenth anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education.
In 1972, Unger and Peter Gettinger formed Hotel Films International, the first venture in Europe that made films available in hotel rooms via closed-circuit television. They sold the company to a Swiss/Arab interest in 1975.
Medal of Honor
In 1978, at a special investiture ceremony "in recognition of his services in promoting US/Yugoslavian cultural and trade relations," Unger was bestowed a "Medal of Honor" and designated an "Honored Artist" by President Tito for films that he either produced or co-produced in Yugoslavia: Battle of Neretva (Bitka na Neretvi, nominated for Best Foreign Film at the 42nd Academy Awards in April 1970), The Day That Shook the World (Atentat u Sarajevu, 1975) and Force 10 from Navarone (1978).